Just one red card.
A player can receive one or two yellow cards before being shown a red card in a soccer match.
A player can receive a maximum of one red card in a soccer match, which results in the player being sent off the field and their team playing with one less player.
In soccer stats, "YR" typically stands for "Yellow Card." It indicates the number of yellow cards a player has received during a match or season. Yellow cards are issued as a caution for various infractions, and accumulating too many can lead to a suspension from future matches.
You will have 66 baseball cards and 86 soccer cards.
two cards
In the English Premier League, a player receives a one-match suspension after accumulating five yellow cards in a single season. However, if a player receives two yellow cards in a single match, they are sent off and automatically suspended for the next match. Thus, a player would miss one game for receiving two yellow cards in a single match.
Soccer has two types of cards, yellow and red. Yellow cards are used to caution a player for a major breach of the rules, called "misconduct". A second yellow card, as well as several egregious forms of misconduct, warrant a red card, which indicates that the player is sent off and can no longer play in that game or remain in the vicinity of the pitch. Some similar games (which do not follow the IFAB Laws of the Game) can employ blue, green, black, white, or even so-called "soft red" cards to mean various things, but they aren't part of the soccer / football that most of the world plays.
In the FIFA World Cup tournament and in many leagues, a player getting a red card will miss the rest of the match and also the next match. Some leagues suspend players for several games at a time for accumulating several red cards throughout a season.
3
3
one
Well 90 minutes in a soccer match 60 seconds in a minute. 90*60=5400 seconds